The DNA Cold Case Archive — Murders Solved by Genetic Genealogy, Family Trees, and Evidence That Waited Decades to Speak
A master archive of murders solved by DNA, forensic genealogy, and evidence that waited decades for science to catch up.
Some crimes seem impossible to solve—until one small detail changes everything. Cases like the BTK Killer, the Golden State Killer, and the DNA breakthrough that solved a decades-old murder show how even the coldest cases can eventually be cracked.
Some stories are about survival and justice, like Jaycee Dugard and Elizabeth Shoaf, where victims found a way to escape and bring their captors to justice.
Others are solved through persistence and technology, from the Kelsey Berreth case to the truth behind Sherri Papini’s disappearance and the identity behind the Boston Strangler.
These are the stories where the truth didn’t stay hidden forever—and where answers finally came, sometimes years later.
Explore the full collection of solved cases below.
A master archive of murders solved by DNA, forensic genealogy, and evidence that waited decades for science to catch up.
In 1977, hunters in the Sierra found the body of a teenage girl near Emigrant Gap and nobody could tell them her name. Nearly fifty years later, advanced DNA work finally revealed she was Melinda Pip Beardsley, a young hitchhiker whose story had been waiting in silence for decades.
The Martin family mystery follows a Portland family that vanished in 1958 after what should have been a simple day trip, leaving behind one of Oregon’s most haunting cold cases. After decades of rumors, river searches, and unanswered questions, modern DNA testing finally helped identify the family linked to remains recovered from the Columbia River.
Rita Curran was a 24-year-old schoolteacher in Burlington, Vermont, when someone entered her apartment in 1971 and killed her. For more than 50 years, the case sat in silence until modern forensic genealogy finally gave investigators the name they had been missing all along.
On a Friday night in November 1987, two young people set out on what should have been a simple trip. Jay Cook was nineteen. Tanya Van Cuylenborg was eighteen. They…
On a gray November morning in 1987, two young people climbed into a van in British Columbia and headed toward Seattle. They were not running from anything. They were not…
For decades, the BTK killer looked like an ordinary Wichita man while police hunted a ghost. Then his own ego—and one traceable floppy disk—finally unmasked Dennis Rader.
After Lori Erica Ruff died, her family opened a lockbox and discovered the woman they knew had been living under a stolen identity for decades. The name was eventually solved, but the reason she erased herself still leaves the case feeling unfinished.
Boston spent years living with the fear of a killer who turned apartments into crime scenes. Long after the panic faded, DNA gave one part of the answer—while the rest of the case kept its uneasy shadow.
A teenage girl steps out of a Perris house before dawn and exposes one of the most disturbing family captivity cases in modern America. The Turpin family story still lingers because the horror was hidden behind a home that looked completely ordinary.